Bushy tailed this morning, I sped through most of this in fifteen minutes, thanks to some write-ins and chunky anagrams. However the last few eluded me for a while longer, ending with 1d and 12a, even now I’m not sure why 12a is what it is.
I see some blog-readers are asking for more clarity in explanations (I do try to spell them out without being patronising) and the blog repeating each clue before the analysis. This latter idea would need a change of template for me, away from my simple HTML effort, and I’m not keen to copy and paste clues individually from the online puzzle into the draft blog. If someone sends me an easy solution to this, without my having to write java script, I’ll give it a go.
That aside, I think it would be boring if every blogger followed the same style and syntax. Below, D = definition.
| Across |
| 1 |
ELDEST – An easy starter; hidden word in ISRA(EL DEST)INED; D firstborn. |
| 4 |
PLACATES – Insert CA (accountant) into PLATES (sheets); D calms down. |
| 10 |
CONFIDANT – Anagram of O from DUO, with CAN’T FIND; D intimate, as a noun. |
| 11 |
AMBER – Reverse RA (artist), insert MBE (award), D golden. |
| 12 |
DOE – An animal D-E, so I wrote in DOE. My poetry knowledge is as minimal as I’ve always wanted it to be, I dislike all poetry except Lewis Carroll’s, so now I can’t explain which poem is being evoked here. Or have I missed the point? EDIT yes I missed the point, as explained below by our Noddy friend; ODE is the poem, with the D promoted (died too soon). Doh! |
| 13 |
GODCHILDREN – Cryptic D. Well, not very cryptic. |
| 14 |
SIMIAN – Means ape-like, sounds like a Hebrew tribe SIMEON. |
| 16 |
SANDPIT – No need to conjure up names of Polish politicians with too many Ws and Zs. SAND = polish, PIT sounds like PITT, elder or younger. D play area fit for toddlers. |
| 19 |
CONICAL – COAL = solid fuel, insert NIC(K) = short chip, D of regular shape. |
| 20 |
DUENNA – DUE = anticipated, NNA = ANN reversed; D escort. |
| 22 |
BODYBUILDER – (BURIED BY OLD)*; D muscleman. |
| 25 |
TUX – TU = workers collectively, X = vote; D DJ, dinner jacket, short for tuxedo. |
| 26 |
UNCUT – UN = French for ‘a’, CUT = hack; D missing none of the action. |
| 27 |
TOWNSCAPE – Insert OWNS C (allows, clubs) into TAPE = record; D urban development. I wonder how much longer ‘tape’ will survive as a synonym for ‘record’? |
| 28 |
DESERVED – DE = case of D(ELEGAT)E, SERVED = did job; D earned. |
| 29 |
STREET – Insert TREE (something like plane) into ST (stone); D the way. |
| Down |
| 1 |
ESCUDO – ESC = key, U = university, DO = study, read, “I’m doing Maths”; D former capital, old currency of Portugal. In spite of having E*C*** this held me up to too long, I kept thinking of cities not cash. And the old ‘key’ = esc, alt, del idea I find easy to forget. |
| 2 |
DANDELION – DON = academic, insert AN, DELI (outlet); D plant. My second one in after 1a. |
| 3 |
SWING – Cryptic D, genre of music. |
| 5 |
LET THE SIDE DOWN – If you let the side down you’ve disappointed your colleagues, and a literal meaning for unloading a truck. |
| 6 |
CHALLENGE – CHARGE would be custody, replace the R (king) in that word with NELL reversed; D dispute. |
| 7 |
TABOR – ABORT = stop, move the T to the top; D drum. |
| 8 |
SERENITY – Anagram of EYESTRAIN without the letter A, (EYESTRIN)*; D a sense of calm. |
| 9 |
CARDINAL VIRTUE – (LUCID NARRATIVE)*; D a very good thing. A fine anagram too. |
| 15 |
INCUBATOR – IN, CUBA (island), TOR = ROT (corruption) mounting; D one brooding. |
| 17 |
PENETRATE – PENT = shut up, insert E (European) > PENET, RATE = levy; D bore. |
| 18 |
ICEBOUND – ICE = finish off, slang for kill, BOUND = jump; D fast (stuck) in Arctic conditions. |
| 21 |
EXCEPT – EXCERPT = selection, remove the R (run); D bar, as in ‘all bar three’. |
| 23 |
DOCKS – I liked this, simple but elegant. DOCK = moor, as in boat; S = first letter of spread (minimally) D weeds. |
| 24 |
RESET – RE = note, as in Doh Re Mi, SET = firm; D fresh start. |
I think 12a is ODE (poem)with the D promoted (too soon).
But thanks for explaining some of the others (e.g. 23d)!
Edited at 2016-09-28 08:07 am (UTC)
Edited at 2016-09-28 08:34 am (UTC)
Thanks to setter and blogger
I’m not sure of a couple of bits:
27a: Why does OWNS = allows?
29a: Why does TREE = plane?
Thanks
own and allow are synonyms in the Thesaurus, under the sub heading of ‘acknowledge’.
Edited at 2016-09-28 09:08 am (UTC)
TABOR, DUENNA and ESCUDO were prised reluctantly from the crossword-only section of my brain. Will attempt to use them in conversation in the hope that they’ll be in a more accessible place next time they’re required.
Enjoyed both of the three-letter offerings today. Thanks setter and Pip.
(Pip, I wouldn’t bother too much about changing your blogging style, unless of course they threaten to reduce our pay).
45 minutes for this, with news from down under eagerly anticipated.
Congratulations to Sotira for toppling the mighty V. A portent of things to come, perhaps?
My Championship ambitions remain where they ought to be — trying to finish 3 puzzles in an hour without screwing up. Which is harder than it sounds when you’re in a room full of people who seem to know what they’re doing rather better than you do!
I did this in three sittings as I had to go for a check-up in Quackland. In the taxi for ten minutes – in the waiting room for a couple of minutes – and back home over a late breakfast.
I reckon about 45 minutes in all.
FOI 1ac ELDEST LOI 14ac SIMIAN
WOD TUX – named after the TUXEDO COUNTRY CLUB, Chicago where it was first noted – yonks ago.
COD 23dn DOCKS wickedly simples.
horry Shanghai
Thought so…
I will add it to my Stanley Stamp’s Gibeon Album.
Nice puzzle. Another where the setter somehow forces you to work with the wordplay without resorting to obscurity, even when including the dread word ‘plant’, or biblical references. Of course words like DUENNA or ESCUDO are obscure in the real world but in Crosswordland they’re commonplace.
Edited at 2016-09-28 08:42 am (UTC)
I suggest a variation on our traditional game of “stumps”. Each competitor sculls a pint, puts his or her head down on a cricket stump, eyes closed, and circles the stump ten times without raising their head. Then they (attempt to) run towards the moderator with completed crossword in hand.
That would bring the crowds back to crosswording.
Apologies ….. it’s been a long day.
On style, ever since I discovered you can copy/paste the entire list of clues (not to mention right click/search Google) I’ve used that as the basis for producing a blog. Usually pasting via Notepad to avoid extraneous formatting, then editing in Word to take advantage of spellchecking etc. Copy the result, paste as plain text into LJ, and use LJ’s visual editor to format. Works for me, but might explain why it takes me a while. Avoids all that tedious mucking about in Hypertext.
LOI was PENETRATE, which was very nearly chucked in as an unparsed ‘punctuate’.
I really am not bothered by how the bloggers format their offerings, am just grateful that they do. Many thanks, Pip et al!
I love the idiosyncratic styles found in the notes and queries but the solution itself should be better disciplined – even formatted. Galspray for example is very easy to follow, as is The Rotter in the QC. We all love Verlaine!
The setters have to follow a fairly complex regimen – why not Joe Blogs & Co.?
All bloggers should give their time taken in solving – (however embarrasing)it helps the solvers gain an idea of what they are up against on any particular day. I know most do – but others do not.
And last but not least anagram indicator and its ugly diminutive could easily looked after by a shorthand @.
The rest of us have an annoying habit of referringin our comments to 2ac etc without giving the word. I am constantly having to scroll up to find what 6dn or 23ac actually is.
meldrew Shanghai
Perhaps the time has come for you to set up your own Times crossword blog and run it according to your own particular rules and regulations and see how many takers you get to write the blogs and comment upon what’s been written. Then I shall be delighted to come along and pick holes. In the meantime we shall continue to muddle along here as best we can.
Edited at 2016-09-28 03:13 pm (UTC)
I think there’s a King Lear joke there somewhere…
Edited at 2016-09-28 12:47 pm (UTC)
I tried again over lunch, adding perhaps twenty minutes to my existing hour, and polished the whole thing off without much problem (glad the ape wasn’t as unknown as the Hebrew tribe!)
Funny how a few hours doing nothing more stimulating than your tax return can make all the difference. I’m thinking of moving my solving to lunchtimes and doing something else during my dozy just-woken-up hour…
Otherwise, found it slightly tricky especially the SE, 27:03 which is a bit slow.
Rob
Thanks blogger; different styles add variety.
Alan
Today I decided that there was probably a biblical tribe called the Gibbens, which led me to biff a faintly plausible BACKBITER. Hopefully I’m just doing the opposite of peaking too early (which is what, do we think?)
Edited at 2016-09-28 02:19 pm (UTC)
It makes me a little uneasy when bloggers post the entire clue with an explanation, to me that is tantamount to plagiarism. In the early days of the blog the paper requested we do not explain every single clue since they had a “dial an answer” service. I like to think that the readers of the blog are looking more to fill in the gaps and get some entertainment and chatter going.
With the Saturday and Sunday puzzles it’s helpful but not essential. But the Jumbos have a 2 week hiatus and the TLS (which I’m currently blogging) a 3 week time lag and that makes the inclusion of the clues really useful because I for one have usually forgotten all about the clue(s) that I had trouble with and I don’t always get around to submitting those puzzles when I finish them.
As mentioned above, a tricky 27 minutes, SE most intractable.
Rob
All three of the daily cryptic solving blogs have been running reports with complete sets of clues for at least a few years, and as far as I know, none of the newspapers involved have asked them to do anything different. It would be rather odd if they did, when we remember that:
As far as the style of reports goes, I’m 100% in favour of allowing the people who write them to make their own choice about the format. They are, after all, contributing a significant amount of their spare time with no monetary reward.
Peter Biddlecombe, Sunday Times Crossword Editor
Edited at 2016-11-11 11:12 am (UTC)
meldrew Shanghai
Regarding blogs and bloggers – I am in the camp that enjoys the varied blog styles, including Pip’s.
I note also that “horryd Shanghai” has become “meldrew Shanghai”. Is this a sign of advancing years?
As far as blog formats are concerned I’m very firmly of the opinion that because the bloggers give their time for free it’s entirely up to them how they present each blog.
Oh, the puzzle. My time was 40 minutes, but that includes six minutes meeting with a workman who came to measure my basement window for a repair. This activity shook up my neurons, and when I returned I instantly put in several outstanding clues, leaving only ‘escudo’. I had thought that ‘E’ was the key, but I had ‘ode’ instead of ‘doe’, having reversed the parsing. When I tried ‘esc’, I saw ‘escudo’ at once even with the bad crossing letter, and completed the puzzle.
As for Flashman’s question, take these lines from Keats:
“The wakeful bloodhound rose, and shook his hide, But his sagacious eye an inmate owns….”
If you only understand the common contemporary meanings of ‘inmate’ and ‘owns’, you are going to go very wrong in your parsing. This was discussed by Auden, and referred to by Kenner in ‘The Pound Era’.
Edited at 2016-09-28 07:45 pm (UTC)
I’ve no idea whether the Times helpline giving answers still exists but in any case it’s redundant for on-line users as on their new crossword platform it’s possible to click and reveal the answers at will for non competition puzzles.
Edited at 2016-09-28 07:22 pm (UTC)
Chris London.